Build An
Organic Vegetable Garden On Your Lawn
If you have a lawn, you
probably wondered often enough why you keep up with such a
useless, time-consuming and expensive piece of outdoor
landscaping when you could instead have a healthy and
productive organic vegetable garden.
Now that even the White House
is starting a garden, it could be the right time for you as
well!
Many people who would like to
turn to organic vegetable gardening are put off by the idea
that it must be a difficult and time-consuming endeavour, and
that a lot of tilling and other back-breaking work is
involved.
In fact, if you follow some
basic permaculture precepts and let nature do its work, it will
be very easy work. Unless your lawn is contaminated by a lot of
pesticides, you won't even have to remove the grass.
First, delimit the lawn area
for your organic vegetable garden with some thread, or with
chalk. You can make it as big as the White House veggie garden
patch, thirty by thirty feet, or smaller. Water this area
generously, making sure that the ground is thoroughly
soaked.
Cover the area with a six inch
thick mix of sand or gravel, old grass clippings, soil, and
some ready-made organic compost or manure.
This will ensure a solid
nutrient base for your organic vegetables to grow on in years
to come. Cover everything with cardboard, or with several
layers of newspaper. This cover will eventually become compost
too.
Next you need to build a
simple raised bed, made of planks, which you will put on top of
the newspaper or cardboard. In due time the paper will
decompose and become part of the organic base, but at first you
will need it as a barrier between the early plants and the
high-quality soil that you will now add.
The frames of the raised beds
for your vegetable garden need to be filled with more organic
compost, this time mixed with normal organic soil and some
vermiculite for aeration.
You are now done with the
preparation of the organic vegetable garden patch. Leave it be
for three or four weeks so that small burrowing insects have
the time to come back and to turn the former piece of sterile
lawn into a rich patch of good quality soil.
Now is the time to plant baby
plants known as seedlings, or alternatively seeds. If you don't
have any available from a windowsill you can get seeds and
seedlings from shops, from neighbours, or over the internet at
specialized organic vegetable gardening retailers.
Regarding the herbs and
vegetables to pick for your lawn turned new garden, go wild and
take whatever you prefer. Don't be afraid to leave out some
common plants and go for lesser known crops, the variety of
plants available to the home grower compared to the supermarket
is staggering.
It's recommended to involve
any kids that live in your area in the planning of the organic
vegetable garden. This should of course include your own
children, but also any other kids in your neighbourhood that
your family is on friendly terms with. They will be engrossed
in the activity, and you will get some help to transform that
lawn into a garden.
Starting a compost heap is
just as important as the other steps to a perfect organic
vegetable garden. For that you need to pile all your garden
clippings and non-animal kitchen waste into a wooden frame or a
special composting box and water. After a while, you will have
more compost for your plants.
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